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The 1998 Smithsonian Folklife Festival

Foodways - Philippine Kitchen


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Milagros Enriquez, Chinggay Bernardo, and Teresa Santiago demonstrate the preparation of foods from Bulacan Province.
Photo by Richard Strauss


The Philippine Kitchen provided an opportunity for cooks from throughout the country to present every-day and celebratory foods. Special events in the Kitchen included the cooking of lechon (pig) on a bamboo spit.



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Pacita Ignacio presents Miguelito Abuso who prepares decorative leaves used to ornament the buildings of Lukban where the Pahiyas festival takes place.
Photo by Eric Long



What is the most typical Philippine food? Is it sinigang, a cold, sour stew that equally accomodates fish, meat, fowl, or prawns? Is it adobo, meat, shellfish, or vegetables cooked in vinegar? Is it pancit, the many kinds of noodles found at all celebrations? Or could it be rellenong manok, the capon stuffed for Christmas? Even Filipinos cannot frame a simple answer to these questions, so varied is their cuisine and its origins. Philippine culinary influences include Southeast Asia, Mexico, Spain, China, and the United States. Still, indigenous foods are alive and well in the provinces where ingredients are always available, inexpensive, and sometimes even free. Because indigenous, indigenized, and imported foods meet and mix on the Filipino dinner table, one could say that Philippine food is all of the above. The following recipes speak of a history of trade, colonization, foreign influence, and social transformation. Tasting the many variations in Philippine food is to savor the many flavors of Philippine culture. The following are two recipes representative of Philippine cooking:


Ginatong Hipon (Prawns In Spicy Coconut Sauce)

8 or 9 shrimp, large, shelled, deveined, split with tail intact
1/3 of an onion, small, thinly sliced
1/2 teaspoon garlic, crushed
1 teaspoon ginger, finely sliced
1 tablespoon cooking oil
1 teaspoon patis (fish sauce)
1/8 teaspoon chili pepper, crushed
1/4 cup coconut milk
2 banana peppers

Saute garlic and ginger in oil.   Add onions.  Cook about one minute.  Throw in the shrimp, stir once, then add the patis (fish sauce), chili pepper, banana peppers, and coconut milk.   Cook for about 3 minutes.  This will reduce the coconut milk sauce.  The shrimp will be succulent and sweet!

Serving Suggestions:  Dish into a small black or white dinner dish.  Decorate with a sprig of parsley or mint leaves.  If you like, spinkle lightly with red pepper to suggest a hot and spicy dish.  Serve with bowl of steamed rice, a side of cucumbers in sweet and sour vinaigrette, a bottle of San Miguel beer, a serving of caramel custard (leche flan), and a robust cup of Spanish coffee - makes a simple but truly fine meal.

 

Sinigang Na Hipon (Shrimp or Prawns in Sour Soup)

12 to 16 shrimp, large (shelled or unshelled), or 16 to 20 prawns
1 onion, medium sized, cut into 8 pieces
2 tomatoes, medium sized, cut into wedges
1 white radish, medium sized, (or several pieces of red radish) sliced diagonally
1 bunch fresh mustard leaves (about 6 leaves including tender stems) cut in two
   (or substitute kale of spinach)
2 peppers, banana or jalapeno
1/2 cup tamarind water (or substitute the juice from 2 lemons)
1 ginger root, thumb sized, crushed
1 tablespoon patis (fish sauce)
5 cups water

      Wash shrimp/prawns in cold water.  Shell or not, as you like.  In medium sauce pan, bring water to boil.  Add vegetables, except for mustard leaves.  Allow to boil briskly for about 2 minutes.  Lower the heat and add tamarind water and patis.  Add shrimp/prawns and mustard leaves and simmer for another 3 minutes. 
      The tamarind water is from the Philippines or Thailand and is now available in Asian stores in the U.S.  Also available is packaged sinigang base or broth.  Almost any green vegetable can be used - okra, green beans, kangkong (swamp cabbage), spinach, or Chinese cabbage.  Do not fail to use radishes.   Why? Because it adds to this signature soup a full and distinct taste.


Film for the Smithsonian Folklife Festival was graciously provided by FUJIFILM USA

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